Australia, Indonesia mull over joint patrols
SYDNEY—Australia is considering joint patrols with Indonesia in the disputed South China Sea, Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said on Tuesday, in a move set to irk Beijing.
The possibility was raised by Jakarta during meetings between Bishop and Defense Minister Marise Payne and Indonesian officials, including Defense Minister Ryamizard Ryacudu, last week.
“We have agreed to explore options to increase maritime cooperation and of course that would include coordinated
activities in the South China Sea and the Sulu Sea,” Bishop told the Australian Broadcasting Corp.
Freedom of navigation
“This is all consistent with our policy of exercising our right of freedom of navigation and that’s in accordance with international law,” she said.
Ryacudu was cited by Sydney Morning Herald as saying he had proposed a “peace patrol” with Australia.
Article continues after this advertisement“There are no intentions to disrupt the relationship [with China]. It is called a peace patrol, it brings peace. It is about protecting fish in each other’s areas,” he said.
Article continues after this advertisementChina asserts sovereignty over almost all of the resource-rich South China Sea, despite rival claims from its Southeast Asian neighbors most notably the Philippines, which took the case to the Hague-based Permanent Court of Arbitration.
The UN-backed court ruled in July that there was no legal basis to China’s claims, a verdict Beijing dismissed vehemently.
Australia, like staunch ally the United States, has no claims of its own in the area, but insists that all shipping has a right to pass through seas it regards as international waters.
Last month, the United States sailed a warship near disputed territory in the South China Sea, with China slamming the move as a “serious illegal act” and “deliberately provocative.”
Discussion on potential joint patrols comes amid uncertainty in the region with President Duterte of the Philippines
unsettling Manila’s traditional allies by signaling a shift
away from Washington toward Beijing.
Unlike some Southeast Asian neighbors, Jakarta has long maintained it has no
maritime disputes with Beijing in the South China Sea and does not contest ownership of reefs or islets there.
But Beijing’s expansive claims overlap Indonesia’s exclusive economic zone, waters where a state has the right to
exploit resources, around the Natunas, a remote scattering of islands that are rich fishing grounds.
Indonesian sovereignty
In June, Indonesian President Joko Widodo toured the islands on a warship in a move seen as sending a strong message to China to respect Indonesian sovereignty.
Bishop said the Australian Navy had already conducted joint exercises in the South China Sea with India and the United States as “a regular part of what our Navy does and it’s also part of our engagement in the region.” —AFP